analog photography

Analog photography is the use of light-sensitive materials to produce permanent visible images
(photographs). The most familiar photographic processes depend on the light-sensitivity
of the silver halides. A photographic emulsion
is a preparation of tiny crystals of these salts suspended in a thin layer
of gelatin coated on a glass, film, or paper support. On brief exposure
to light in a camera or other apparatus, a latent image in activated silver salt is formed wherever
light has fallen on the emulsion. This image is made visible in development,
when the activated silver halide crystals (but not the unexposed ones) are
reduced to metallic silver (black) using a weak organic reducing
agent (the developer). The silver agent is then made
permanent by fixing, in the course of which it becomes
possible to examine the image is light for the first time. Fixing agents
(fixers) work by dissolving out the silver halide crystals
which were not activated on exposure. The image made in this way is densest
in silver where the original subject was brightest, and lightest where the
subject was darkest; it is thus a "negative" image. To produce a positive
image, the negative (which is usually made on a film or glass (plate) support)
is itself made the original in the above process, the result being a positive
"print" usually on a paper carrier. An alternative method of producing a
positive image is to bleach away the developed image on the original film
or plate before fixing, and re-expose the unactivated halide in diffuse light.
This forms a second latent image which on development produces a positive
image of the original subject (reversal processing).

In photographic development and printing, the exposed
film is removed from the camera (1) and, in the darkroom, is wound
on to a reel (2) that fits into a light-proof tank. Steps 3 through
11 may be carried out with the lights on. The tank is filled with
developer (3) and agitated during development (4). After the proper
time has elapsed, the developer is poured out (5) and and the tank
is filled with the stop bath (6) to halt development. The stop bath
in turn is poured out (7), and the fixer is poured in (8) and removed
after a specified time (9). The negative is then washed (10) and dried
(11). To make enlargements, light is shone through the negative in
the enlarger (12a) onto sensitive paper. Alternatively, the paper
can be exposed directly with both held together in a frame (12b –
"contact" printing). using red light, the photographer develops the
prints (13), washes them (14) – sometimes after using a stop
bath – and fixes them (15). The prints are then washed again
(16) and dried by hand (17a) or in a dryer (17b).

The history of photography from the earliest work of Niépce, Daguerre
(see daguerreotype, and Fox Talbot
to the present has seen successive refinements in materials, techniques,
and equipment. Photography became a popular hobby after George Eastman first marketed roll film in 1889. The silver halides themselves are sensitive
to light only from the blue end of the spectrum so that in the earliest photographs other colors appear dark. The color-sensitivity
of emulsions was improved from the 1870s onward as small quantities of sensitizing
dyes were incorporated. "Orthochromatic" plates became available after 1884
and "panchromatic" from 1906.

Motion picture photography dates from 1890, when Thomas Edison built a device to expose Eastman's roll film, and motion pictures rapidly
became an important art form. Not all modern analog photographic methods
employ the silver-halide process; xerography and the blueprint and ozalid
processes work differently. False-color photography and the diffusion process
used in the Polaroid Land camera (invented by Edwin Land)
are both developments of the silver-halide process.